Apollo Federation
Dgraph supports Apollo federation starting in release version 21.03. This lets you create a gateway GraphQL service that includes the Dgraph GraphQL API and other GraphQL services.
Support for Apollo federation directives
The current implementation supports the following five directives: @key
, @extends
, @external
, @provides
, and @requires
.
@key
directive
This directive takes one field argument inside it: the @key
field. There are few limitations on how to use @key
directives:
- Users can define the
@key
directive only once for a type - Support for multiple key fields is not currently available.
- Since the
@key
field acts as a foreign key to resolve entities from the service where it is extended, the field provided as an argument inside the@key
directive should be ofID
type or have the@id
directive on it.
For example -
type User @key(fields: "id") {
id: ID!
name: String
}
@extends
directive
This directive provides support for extended definitions. For example, if the above-defined User
type is defined in some other service, you can extend it in Dgraph’s GraphQL service by using the @extends
directive, as follows:
type User @key(fields: "id") @extends{
id: String! @id @external
products: [Product]
}
You can also achieve this with the extend
keyword; so you have a choice between two types of syntax to extend a type into your Dgraph GraphQL service: extend type User ...
or type User @extends ...
.
@external
directive
You use this directive when the given field is not stored in this service. It can only be used on extended type definitions. For example, it is used in the example shown above on the id
field of the User
type.
@provides
directive
You use this directive on a field that tells the gateway to return a specific fieldset from the base type while fetching the field.
For example -
type Review @key(fields: "id") {
product: Product @provides(fields: "name price")
}
extend type Product @key(fields: "upc") {
upc: String @external
name: String @external
price: Int @external
}
While fetching Review.product
from the review
service, and if the name
or price
is also queried, the gateway will fetch these from the review
service itself. So, the review
service also resolves these fields, even though both fields are @external
.
@requires
directive
You use this directive on a field to annotate the fieldset of the base type. You can use it to develop a query plan where the required fields may not be needed by the client, but the service may need additional information from other services.
For example -
extend type User @key(fields: "id") {
id: ID! @external
email: String @external
reviews: [Review] @requires(fields: "email")
}
When the gateway fetches user.reviews
from the review
service, the gateway will get user.email
from the User
service and provide it as an argument to the _entities
query.
Using @requires
alone on a field doesn’t make much sense. In cases where you need to use @requires
, you should also add some custom logic on that field. You can add such logic using the @lambda
or @custom(http: {...})
directives.
Here’s an example -
- Schema:
extend type User @key(fields: "id") {
id: ID! @external
email: String @external
reviews: [Review] @requires(fields: "email") @lambda
}
- Lambda Script:
// returns a list of reviews for a user
async function userReviews({parent, graphql}) {
let reviews = [];
// find the reviews for a user using the email and return them.
// Even though the email has been declared `@external`, it will be available as `parent.email` as it is mentioned in `@requires`.
return reviews
}
self.addGraphQLResolvers({
"User.reviews": userReviews
})
Generated queries and mutations
In this section, you will see what all queries and mutations will be available to individual service and to the Apollo gateway.
Let’s take the below schema as an example -
type Mission @key(fields: "id") {
id: ID!
crew: [Astronaut]
designation: String!
startDate: String
endDate: String
}
type Astronaut @key(fields: "id") @extends {
id: ID! @external
missions: [Mission]
}
The queries and mutations which are exposed to the gateway are -
type Query {
getMission(id: ID!): Mission
queryMission(filter: MissionFilter, order: MissionOrder, first: Int, offset: Int): [Mission]
aggregateMission(filter: MissionFilter): MissionAggregateResult
}
type Mutation {
addMission(input: [AddMissionInput!]!): AddMissionPayload
updateMission(input: UpdateMissionInput!): UpdateMissionPayload
deleteMission(filter: MissionFilter!): DeleteMissionPayload
addAstronaut(input: [AddAstronautInput!]!): AddAstronautPayload
updateAstronaut(input: UpdateAstronautInput!): UpdateAstronautPayload
deleteAstronaut(filter: AstronautFilter!): DeleteAstronautPayload
}
The queries for Astronaut
are not exposed to the gateway because they are resolved through the _entities
resolver. However, these queries are available on the Dgraph GraphQL API endpoint.
Mutation for extended
types
If you want to add an object of Astronaut
type which is extended in this service.
The mutation addAstronaut
takes AddAstronautInput
, which is generated as follows:
input AddAstronautInput {
id: ID!
missions: [MissionRef]
}
The id
field is of ID
type, which is usually generated internally by Dgraph. But, In this case, it’s provided as an input. The user should provide the same id
value that is present in the GraphQL service where the type Astronaut
is defined.
For example, let’s assume that the type Astronaut
is defined in some other service, AstronautService
, as follows:
type Astronaut @key(fields: "id") {
id: ID!
name: String!
}
When adding an object of type Astronaut
, you should first add it to the AstronautService
service. Then, you can call the addAstronaut
mutation with the value of id
provided as an argument that must be equal to the value in AstronautService
service.